Login / Signup

Free Access

What If What They Say Is True?

Sermon
What If What They Say Is True?
First Lesson Sermons For Sundays After Pentecost (Middle Third) Cycle C
Whether through the complicated process of socialization or good manners or simple maturity, somehow we learn how to respond appropriately to particular phrases in particular settings. "Paper or plastic?" "Cash or charge?" "Smoking or non-smoking?" We negotiate and navigate our lives by knowing what to say and when to say it:

"The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you." "And also with you."

"Excuse me." "Please." "Thank you." "You're welcome."

"I love you." "I love you, too."

"I'm sorry." "It's okay."

"Lift up your hearts." "We lift them up to the Lord."

"What kind of dressing for your salad?"

"I'm fine, how are you?"
We learn the responses, the right answers, and then that knowledge provides us a shield of comfort and confidence as we go through life because we know what to say and what to do.

At work or play, home or school or church or wherever, we learn the specific languages and the peculiar vocabularies. We learn what is effective, authoritative, cool, popular, funny, acceptable. We learn what to say, and we learn what cannot be said. As we master the codes for proper behavior in these different contexts, we file this information alongside our passwords and PIN numbers and create for ourselves a sort of security blanket, a safe zone in which we live and move and have our being. It's a zone in which all is pretty predictable, pretty comfortable, and pretty enjoyable. We like knowing what to say.

But what do you do when something comes along that you're not prepared for? What do you do when something dislodges you from your comfort zone? What do you do when you are addressed in such a way that you don't immediately and confidently know the answer? Something so unusual, so unpredictable, so unfamiliar that you don't have a handy response?

In other words, what do you do when God calls you? For it seems to me that God's call will most likely come to us in unexpected ways, cast in tones that are disruptive and disturbing to our carefully crafted worlds. God's call is not going to fit easily into what we are already doing; it's not going to slide neatly into the patterns and codes that we already have learned. Just ask Jeremiah.

God makes a strong opening bid in this passage, pronouncing a divine claim on Jeremiah's life before he had even been born. "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you," God says to Jeremiah, "... I appointed you to be a prophet to the nations" (1:5). How's that for a word from outside the comfort zone? Nothing in his life could have prepared Jeremiah for this word because it is a word from beyond and before his life even began. It is a call unexpected in every sense. Unfamiliar, disorienting, destabilizing.

As Jeremiah struggles to put this extraordinary word from God into some kind of framework, he grasps at the language of protest, "Ah, Lord God! Truly I do not know how ..." (1:6). That's the first thing Jeremiah says in the book that bears his name: "I do not know how." It is something I say all the time. Maybe you have said it, too. "God, I do not know how to do what you are calling me to do. Nothing in my life has equipped me for this task. What you are asking of me does not fit into what I'm doing now. I am unable to categorize it, make sense of it, or understand how it is possible for me to do it."

As he voices his protest to God, Jeremiah lists his inadequacies, "I don't know how to speak for I am only a boy" (1:7). Jeremiah thinks he is limited by his skills and by his age, by who he is and by what he can do. Jeremiah is convinced that he is not qualified to be a prophet to the nations. He is sure of it. "I'm not very old and I'm not much of speaker, so God you should be looking for someone else."

But God's not buying it because God knows that Jeremiah is qualified for this task. Jeremiah is indeed able to do this work -- not because of who Jeremiah is, not on the basis of what Jeremiah can do, not because Jeremiah knows all the answers and has all the right words. None of that matters. Instead, Jeremiah is qualified because of who God is. Jeremiah is able because God is able. God's faithfulness empowers and equips us to respond to God's call.

Left on his own, Jeremiah could never do this work. He's too young and too poor a speaker. Left on his own, left behind his shield of familiarity, within his comfort zone, Jeremiah could never respond to God's call. But God's point in speaking this word is that Jeremiah will not be left on his own. "I'll show you where to go," God says. "I'll tell you what to say and I will be with you" (1:7-8). God does not call people and then leave them. God does not call you and then abandon you. God's faithfulness empowers and equips us to respond to God's call.

So lack of ability is no excuse. And age isn't either. Just as Jeremiah is not too young to do God's work, neither is a teenager I met recently among the 6,661 people at the Presbyterian Youth Triennium. Andy lives in New York City. He is the oldest of several children. He lives in a tough neighborhood. Drugs and gangs and guns are regular features in his environment. Andy told me how he sometimes dodges bullets on his way to his girlfriend's house. He shared with me his concerns about the safety of his younger brothers and sisters. He talked with me about his struggle to be a Christian in the violent place where he lives. Andy believes God has called him to be a witness of peace, but it's understandably hard for him to do when those he loves become victims. Andy can't respond to God's call on his own. He's just not qualified. Nonviolence is not within his comfort zone; nonviolence is not a response that has been conditioned in him. Yet Andy is finding he can do it, he can live peacefully, because the one who has called him to that life has also promised to be with him in all things. God is strengthening Andy to live the life that God has called him to.

Maybe God has been speaking a word to you, maybe God is calling you in a way that you can hardly believe because it doesn't fit neatly into the categories of your life. Maybe it's unfamiliar, disorienting, destabilizing and you don't know how to respond. Maybe it's a call to change your life, to take a different job, to accept a new position of service or leadership. Maybe it's a call to restore a relationship, to set new priorities, to suggest a fresh approach.

God calls Jeremiah "to pluck up and pull down, to destroy and to overthrow" (1:10). Maybe God is calling you to something similar, to dismantling a structure that doesn't work very well, plucking up and pulling down an outmoded way of doing things. Sometimes, something old has to come down before something new can go up.

For example, the wall in Berlin had to come down before democracy could take hold in Eastern Europe. For example, it is only when an alcoholic admits her addiction, only when she starts the process of tearing down the addicted self by naming it for what it is, only then can she begin constructing a new life. In our lives, our church, our community, our nation, there is no shortage of things that need to be plucked up and pulled down. There are perhaps even things that need to be destroyed and overthrown. An attitude, a program, a system, a practice, a prejudice, a habit, a value. Maybe you are being called to be a voice for change, an agent of plucking up and pulling down, of destroying and overthrowing. You won't know how to respond to that call and you won't feel qualified to enact that call. But if you are willing, God is willing. And then there's no limit to what God can accomplish through you.

God's word to Jeremiah though is not just to tear down; it is also a call to build up. Maybe that is what God is calling you to do. To start something new, to advocate a fresh approach, to put forward a different perspective. I sensed among all those Presbyterian young people at the Youth Triennium that there is a new church being born in our midst, a church that worships with heart as well as mind, with body as well as soul, with energy and enthusiasm as well as reason and depth, a church in some ways very different from the Presbyterian Church I have known and served through the years, a church in some ways very different from this one. I wonder if God is calling me to help birth that church. Such a call certainly comes from beyond my comfort zone, and I'm pretty sure I'm not very well equipped to do such a work on my own. I'm wondering if I can muster enough faith to trust God's ability to bring forth new things?

What might God be calling you to build or to plant? Like me, you won't know how to respond to that call and you won't feel qualified to enact that call. But if we are willing, God is willing. And then there's no limit to what God can accomplish through us.

If we are willing. Maybe that's what it comes down to in the end. Maybe nothing much can happen until we are willing to step out in faith, to move outside of our comfort zones, to drop those shields of safety and confidence. Maybe God's greatest act is simply persuading us to trust that God is the power and the presence in, with, and through what God calls us to do. Maybe the hardest thing for God is getting us to realize that we can respond to God's call not because of who we are and what we know, but because of who God is. We are able because God is able.

Amidst all those teenagers, I rejoiced in the various and amazing ways God calls us, each of us. I also found myself moved by the new songs we learned; one in particular has stayed close to me:

What if what they say is true? What if you fed 5,000? What if you calmed the sea, can you calm me?

What if what they say is true? What if you walked on water? What if you healed disease, can you heal me?

What if what they say is true? What if you rose on Easter? What if you conquered death, can you conquer me?1

Can God conquer you? Can God break through your comfort zone with a word of promise that might enable you to do something, to say something, to believe something that you could never do or say or believe on your own? How is God calling you? Listen. Closely.

____________

1. "What If What They Say Is True?" by Eli Morris, Hope Presbyterian Church, Memphis, Tennessee.



UPCOMING WEEKS
In addition to the lectionary resources there are thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...
Advent 3
30 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
27 – Children's Sermons / Resources
20 – Worship Resources
29 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Advent 4
32 – Sermons
120+ – Illustrations / Stories
18 – Children's Sermons / Resources
10 – Worship Resources
18 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Christmas!
24 – Sermons
100+ – Illustrations / Stories
33 – Children's Sermons / Resources
20 – Worship Resources
29 – Commentary / Exegesis
4 – Pastor's Devotions
and more...
Plus thousands of non-lectionary, scripture based resources...

New & Featured This Week

The Immediate Word

Thomas Willadsen
Nazish Naseem
Dean Feldmeyer
Mary Austin
Katy Stenta
George Reed
Christopher Keating
For December 14, 2025:

CSSPlus

Mary Kay Eichelman
Today I have rolled out the red carpet for you.  We are not famous people, movie stars or royalty, so maybe you have not had this kind of fancy treatment. But often for very important people, red carpet is actually put down for them to walk on.

You would think Jesus, the Son of God, would have had the red carpet prepare the way before Him. Do you know what He had instead? He had a man named John the Baptist. It says in Mathew 11:19,

I will send my messenger ahead of you who will prepare your way before you.

Good morning, boys and girls. What am I holding? (Let them answer.) That's right, a loaf of bread. Did any of you eat toast for breakfast this morning? Or did any of you have wheat cereal? (Let them answer.) Bread and (name a wheat cereal) are made from wheat.

Let me ask you another question. Are any of you anxious to see what might be in some of your Christmas presents under your tree? (Let them answer.) You must have great patience to wait until Christmas when you may open them.

That's why I brought this loaf of bread this morning. I want
Leah Thompson
Object: a department store magazine/catalog (or clothing store magazine/catalog)

What then did you go out to see? Someone dressed in soft robes? Look, those who wear soft robes are in royal palaces. (v. 8)

The Village Shepherd

Janice B. Scott
There wasn't much that Adrian was good at, except swimming. He learned to swim when he was little more than a baby, and he loved it. When he was seven he joined a swimming club. It was there that he first met Mr Stevens, the swimming coach.

StoryShare

C. David Mckirachan
Frank Ramirez
Contents
"Truckin'" by C. David McKirachan
"Heretic or Saint?" by Frank Ramirez


* * * * * * * * *


Truckin'
C. David McKirachan
Isaiah 35:1-10

SermonStudio

Elizabeth Achtemeier
This passage has many affinities with the prophecies of Second Isaiah (Isaiah 40-55), and it has often been attributed to him. But there are differences. In Isaiah 40:3, the "way" is for the Lord, here it is for the redeemed and ransomed (vv. 9-10). In Isaiah 51:11, the reference is to the return from Babylonian exile. Here in verse 10, that context is missing, and those who are returning to Zion are the members of Israel dispersed throughout the ancient Near East. Thus, this text is probably from a time after Second Isaiah and sometime after 538 B.C.
Russell F. Anderson
BRIEF COMMENTARY ON THE LESSONS

Lesson 1: Isaiah 35:1--10 (C, E, L); Isaiah 35:1--6, 10 (RC)
Paul E. Robinson
Christmas has a way of bringing back memories. One that came to my mind as I was preparing this message was when my family would be driving home at night in the car and my father would lead us in singing a song. To all of us family members who remember those fun, cozy journeys toward home, there are many layers of meaning to the words. The song goes like this:

There's a long, long trail awinding,
Into the land of my dreams,
Where the nightingales are singing
And the white moon beams.
There's a long, long night of waiting
Dallas A. Brauninger
E-mail
From: KDM
To: God
Subject: Be Patient
Message: In the meantime, God.... Lauds, KDM

E-mail from KDM to God. Subject: Be patient. Message: In the meantime, God.... Lauds, KDM.
Susan R. Andrews
It was a painful experience for both of us. Jane was a young mother about my age. She had been on the pastor nominating committee that called us to New Jersey. And we had shared much laughter and friendship through the years. She also was on the session - and that cold November night she seemed edgy and distant. I soon found out why. Following the meeting, she waited for me out in the parking lot. And after I locked the church door, she simply lit into me. "How dare you!" she said. "How dare you push your own political viewpoints down our throats, and abuse your privilege as a pastor!
H. Burnham Kirkland
Theme: Prepare The Way

Call To Worship
Leader: To those wandering in darkness,
People: Christ came as the Light of the World.
Leader: To those who are at odds with others and themselves,
People: Christ is the Prince of Peace.
Leader: To those who seek the presence of the divine,
People: Christ is Emmanuel, God with us.
All: Come, let us anticipate the advent of our Lord.

Invocation

Robert S. Jarboe
(Distribute this sheet to the readers.)

Date:

Reader A:

Reader B:

Introit
(As the introit is being sung, Readers A and B come forward and stand by the Advent wreath until the music is finished.)

Litany
Reader A: Please turn to the Advent litany in your bulletins.
(Pause as they do so.)
Let all who take refuge in God be glad;
let them ever sing for joy.
O God, spread your protection over them,
that those who love your name may rejoice in you.

Emphasis Preaching Journal

David Coffin
Inevitably it happens to any adult or any church leader toward the end of the year, or the time their driver's license expires. Despite the well-intended efforts to try to settle it through the mail, we end up in a long line at the local Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) office. Typically there is a little box with numbers one is supposed to take so they may be identified when the clerk calls for that number's turn in line. The wait can be very tedious. The workers and customers are both tired and anxious with each unique personal vehicle issue.

Special Occasion

Wildcard SSL